Acting
No biography available.

"Baby Swiss is obsessed with a strange science fiction film. She fantasies about living in its futuristic ideals, and keeps a separate DVD copy in a strongbox under the house just to be on the safe side. Naturally, this drives her unattended husband to the local whorehouse, known as The Village of the Moon. There, he meets up with other unhappy men and drowns his sorrows in high priced call girls. In the meantime, Baby Swiss discovers a kind of platonic love with a like minded neighbor. He is so desperate to be part of her life that he will wait outside her window. Their relationship will turn on whether she cleans the glass, or closes the blinds. And all the while, a homeless Greek chorus champions the freedom of living on the streets, unencumbered by the mindless machinations of being part of this so-called “proper society”" (review excerpt by Bill Gibron)
A man dies of cat food poisoning and has a panoramic life review.

"In this vignette oriented piece, a group of people discuss their own often unique perspective on life. Unlike other titles in his canon, Esoterica is completely apropos. Each sequence suggests the inner psychological struggles of seemingly normal people, the whole “private conversation in their head” thing given new and startling voice over reality. They are talking to themselves - and responding. All the standard players are here - icons from the past (Vietnam Ron, Walt Dongo) as well as new faces (Nolan Ballin, Sara Flanders) fresh and buoyant with the boy genius’s love of language. Together, their paint a stunning portrait of human frailty and mental mania." (review excerpt by Bill Gibron)

This coming-of-age film tells the story of a single mother’s journey to overcome major depression as well as the economic pressures of post-2008 America.

In a crumbling Gotham City, Batman faces a series of brutal, calculated crimes that lead him into a deadly psychological game with the Joker. As the violence escalates, Batman is forced to confront the cost of his crusade, the limits of his morality, and the thin line separating him from the very criminals he fights. Dark, grounded, and intense, Batman: Dying Is Easy explores obsession, identity, and the price of being a symbol in a city that feeds on chaos.